4.4 • 7.7K Ratings
🗓️ 13 September 2016
⏱️ 43 minutes
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0:00.0 | I remember hunting. This is accused, the unsolved murder of Elizabeth Andes. |
0:17.9 | On the last episode, my dad came up to me and he said, Sue, he said they think it was Bob. |
0:27.1 | And I just remember going, no, like that. And just like hit my dad's chest, like totally freaked out. |
0:35.2 | If she had lived and we had, and we had stayed in contact and I had, and we were both free, |
0:44.6 | that I think we might have gone out and something might have transpired. |
0:57.2 | Two days after Bob Young's murder trial began in Butler County, Ohio, his defense lawyer got a |
1:04.0 | typewritten letter in the mail. It was dated March 16, 1979 in post-marked in date in Ohio about |
1:11.4 | 45 miles from Oxford. It read, quote, sir, you must get Bob freed. He did not harm E. Andes. |
1:19.5 | I did it about a half hour before the time estimated he got there. |
1:24.1 | $40 was not much, but I needed a fix badly. Now I'm very sorry. End quote. |
1:31.7 | Deb Light in the lawyer who's working on the case for free calls this the addict letter. |
1:37.4 | Personally, I think that letter could be of extreme significance in this case. |
1:43.8 | The note was sent to Matthew Creehan, Bob's defense lawyer at the time, who forwarded it to police. |
1:50.2 | It was dusted them for fingerprints and in recent years it's been tested for DNA residue. |
1:56.1 | Lightin says in fact that this letter has been so thoroughly analyzed that it's actually |
2:01.0 | been destroyed in the process. Nothing useful has been gleaned. It's one of the many mysteries |
2:07.0 | in this case. This episode, I want to look at how police handled the initial investigation 37 |
2:13.7 | years ago and at the trial that followed just three months later. I'll also address what's |
2:19.8 | been done in years since and I'll tell you straight out. Then not everyone has liked my line of |
2:25.2 | questioning into this case. I used to be in your here and trying to co-pedish and getting nothing. |
2:32.4 | This is Richard Walter, who's regarded as a world renowned profiling expert. He works with an |
2:38.4 | organization called VDoc, which is this cool conglomeration of experts across all kinds of disciplines. |
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